Albuquerque Journal

Historian expands how we see the American Revolution

- BY HAMILTON CAIN STAR TRIBUNE (TNS)

When The 1619 Project first appeared in the New York Times Magazine, it came under fire for journalist­ic whacka-mole; contributo­rs argued that the primary cause of the American Revolution was the preservati­on of slavery, as evidenced by Dunmore’s 1775 Proclamati­on, in which the royal governor of Virginia promised freedom to escaped slaves if they joined the British Loyalists.

In his meticulous­ly researched, beautifull­y calibrated “Liberty Is Sweet,” historian Woody Holton adds necessary nuance, building on Dunmore and other stories previously marginaliz­ed (or invisible) in our narrative of the nation’s birth while illuminati­ng a collective yearning to form a more perfect union.

The Proclamati­on doused fuel on the spontaneou­s uprisings in the Southern colonies, kindling fear among slaveholde­rs such as Thomas Jefferson and George Washington. But as Holton cautions with respect to the colonists’ embargoes of British goods, “the boycotters’ equal emphasis on economic and political concerns should warn us against any effort to explain the American Revolution in strictly ideologica­l terms.”

This underpins one of Holton’s many critical insights: The colonies were diverse in their self-interests and diffuse in their alliances with one another. Trade agreements, land speculatio­n (read: thievery of Native territorie­s), slavery, taxation and the Intolerabl­e Acts all fanned the military uprisings in 1775. Imports, in particular, tipped the scale.

Holton’s painstakin­g yet vivid military coverage is one of the book’s crowning achievemen­ts. The aspiration­s of liberty were rooted in troop movements and risky judgment calls, as in Washington’s evacuation from New York City in 1776, realizing what the British general Howe already knew: The colonials were destined to win a defensive war. Holton also enriches “Liberty Is Sweet” with astute analysis of how the young states began to organize themselves in their grand experiment of self-government.

Against this backdrop he highlights women and people of color who played key roles in the creation of the nation. “The Continenta­l Army had to take recruits where it could get them,” he writes, “and by the ‘Valley Forge’ winter of 1777-1778, nearly half the enlisted men were immigrants and African-Americans.”

Holton, then, threads the needle, expanding the spirit of the 1619 Project while bringing a granular scholarshi­p and immersive storytelli­ng. “Liberty Is Sweet” is a magnificen­t book, a vital account worthy of all the accolades that will come its way.

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